Andrada Mining acquisition elevates the miner to emerging mid-tier status. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRMG.L Share News (RMG)

  • There is currently no data for RMG

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

LONDON BRIEFING: Auction Technology Sets Price As IPO Boom Continues

Wed, 17th Feb 2021 08:10

(Alliance News) - London's IPO market continued its lockdown bonanza on Wednesday, with Auction Technology pricing its GBP250 million raise.

The operator of online auctions said it has set its initial public offering price at 600p per share, giving the company a market capitalisation of GBP600 million upon listing.

Auction Technology is offering up to 41.2 million new shares to raise GBP247.4 million gross for the company. Additionally, selling shareholders will offer 4.2 million existing shares for sale. The total shares being offered will represent up to 45.5% of the total.

Conditional dealings on the London Main Market will start next Tuesday, with unconditional dealings following on February 26.

Auction Technology also said funds managed by Blackrock have entered a cornerstone agreement to invest GBP25 million in the IPO. The new deal raises total cornerstone agreements to GBP125 million.

Chief Executive Officer John-Paul Savant said: "With a 50-year track record, proven commercial model and leading positions in a market supported by significant structural growth trends, we believe that ATG will thrive as a listed business. We are delighted with the high-quality investor support we have had to date which reflects this potential.

"An IPO of Auction Technology Group will support the continued momentum of the business and our focus will remain the same - enhancing our services for auctioneers and bidders and driving long-term sustainable growth."

Auction Technology's listing is one of about 20 IPO announced or completed on the London Main Market and AIM so far in 2021. Biggest so far have been boot maker Dr Martens, with a GBP3.70 billion market cap at its IPO price, and online greeting cards seller Moonpig Group, with a GBP1.20 billion valuation upon listing.

On Tuesday, online retailer Virgin Wines UK announced plans for a market float on AIM, while miner Cornish Metals began trading on the junior market.

Here is what you need to know at the London market open on Wednesday:

----------

MARKETS

----------

FTSE 100: down 0.4% at 6,725.07

----------

Hang Seng: up 1.2% at 31,102.66

Nikkei 225: closed down 0.6% at 30,292.19

DJIA: closed up 64.35 points, or 0.2%, at 31,522.75

S&P 500: closed down 0.1% at 3,932.59

----------

GBP: down at USD1.3875 (USD1.3911)

EUR: down at USD1.2075 (USD1.2110)

Gold: down at USD1,788.75 per ounce (USD1,803.32)

Oil (Brent): up at USD63.67 a barrel (USD62.98)

(changes since previous London equities close)

----------

ECONOMICS AND GENERAL

----------

Wednesday's Key Economic Events still to come

China Lunar New Year holiday continues. Financial markets closed in Shanghai.

0930 GMT UK house price index

1100 CET EU construction output

0700 EST US MBA weekly mortgage applications survey

0830 EST US advance monthly sales for retail and food services

0830 EST US producer price index

0915 EST US industrial production and capacity utilization

1000 EST US NAHB housing market index

1630 EST US API weekly statistical bulletin

----------

UK inflation edged higher annually in January with the country in lockdown, according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics. On an annual basis, UK consumer prices rose 0.7% in January, accelerating from 0.6% in December. The reading beat market consensus, cited by FXStreet, for an 0.5% increase. On a monthly basis, consumer prices fell 0.2% in January following a rise of 0.3% in December. Consensus had expected the reading to come in at negative 0.4%.

In a separate release, the ONS said producer output inflation for goods leaving the factory gate was negative 0.2% year-on-year in January, improving from deflation of 0.4% in December.

----------

The UK National Health Service is likely to remain "at full stretch" for at least another six weeks, a leading health official said as he warned the prime minister against easing lockdown too quickly. Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents NHS trusts in England, has written to Boris Johnson calling for a focus on "data, not just dates" when it comes to the government's approach to the route out of lockdown. Johnson will scrutinise data this week on coronavirus case numbers, hospital admissions, deaths and the impact of the vaccine rollout as he prepares his plan to reduce restrictions. Johnson has said he will aim to give target dates for restrictions being eased when he sets out his plan next Monday, but "won't hesitate" to delay plans if infection rates make it necessary.

----------

One in six people in England could be on the waiting list for NHS treatment by April due to strains on the health service caused by coronavirus, a think tank has warned. Modelling by researchers at Reform showed that patients waiting a year or more had risen by over 12,000% since the start of the pandemic, PA reports. The organisation predicted that waiting lists could hit 10 million by April, equivalent to one in six people in England, as referrals for non-Covid cases begin to resume but limits on NHS capacity remain. NHS directors say that if the predictions are correct then services will face a "mammoth" task to tackle the backlog. Reform said "a lack of system resilience" has forced the NHS to become a "national Covid service" and that patients in need of other serious medical treatments would continue to lose out.

----------

Japan's trade surplus fell by three-quarters annually in January, according to provisional figures by the Ministry of Finance. For January, Japan posted a trade surplus of JPY323.86 billion, about USD3.06 billion, down 75% year-on-year from JPY1.315 trillion. The figure did however, beat market expectations. According to consensus cited by FXStreet, a trade deficit of JPY600 billion was forecast. The value of exports rose 6.4% annually to JPY5.780 trillion and imports dropped 9.5% to JPY6.104 billion.

----------

BROKER RATING CHANGES

----------

ALPHAVALUE RAISES JOHNSON MATTHEY TO 'REDUCE' ('SELL') - TARGET 2,874 PENCE

----------

BOFA RAISES ROYAL MAIL PRICE TARGET TO 590 (470) PENCE - 'BUY'

----------

GOLDMAN SACHS RAISES LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES TO 'NEUTRAL' (SELL) - TARGET 168 (124) PENCE

----------

COMPANIES - FTSE 100

----------

Dunhill cigarette maker British American Tobacco raised its dividend, as it said it delivered resilient earnings against unprecedented challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic. For 2020, revenue was down 0.4% at GBP25.78 billion from GBP25.88 billion in 2019 but pretax profit was up to GBP8.67 billion from GBP7.91 billion. BAT raised its full-year dividend by 2.5% to 215.6 pence from 210.4p paid out in 2019. Looking ahead to 2021, BAT expects constant currency revenue growth in a range of 3% to 5%. It also said it was making continued progress towards its New Categories revenue target of GBP5 billion in 2025. Chief Executive Officer Jack Bowles said: "Last year we increased the number of consumers of our non-combustible products by 3 million to 13.5 million, doubling the rate of consumer adoption in the second half of 2020. We have excellent momentum in New Categories, with accelerating volume and value share gains."

----------

Tobacco peer Imperial Brands said Lukas Paravicini, chief financial officer of agricultural commodities and brokerage group ED&F Man Holdings, will be appointed as its new CFO on August 5 or at an earlier date to be announced. Paravicini succeeds Oliver Tant, who will step down from the role and leave the business following a handover.

----------

Rio Tinto upped its annual payout with a record final dividend as the miner shrugged off Covid-19 to post a hefty profit rise for 2020. Revenue in 2020 was up 3.3% to USD44.61 billion from USD43.17 billion. Its pretax profit surged 38% to USD15.39 billion from USD11.12 billion. The Anglo-Australian miner raised its annual dividend by 26% to 557.0 US cents from 443.0 cents. "USD9.0 billion full-year dividend, equivalent to 557 US cents per share and 72% of underlying earnings, includes USD5.0 billion record final ordinary dividend (309 US cents per share) and USD1.5 billion special dividend (93 US cents per share) declared today," Rio Tinto explained. Rio Tinto's earnings follows peer BHP's upbeat interim results on Tuesday which saw the company declare a record dividend of its own. Also on Tuesday, commodities trader and miner Glencore restored its payout to shareholders.

----------

COMPANIES - FTSE 250

----------

Plus500 said earnings surged in 2020 amid increase in active and new customer numbers. In addition, the online trading services provider proposed a share buyback programme. Plus500 said it intends to buy back up to USD25.0 million of its shares, following the completion of the share buyback programme announced in August 2020. The company said it has appointed Credit Suisse Securities (Europe) to manage the share buyback programme, which will run from February 17 to August 11 or, if earlier, the date of the announcement of the company's interim results for the six months to the end of June. Turning back to results, Plus500 said total revenue more than doubled in 2020 to USD872.5 million from USD354.5 million, with customer income, the company's key growth metric, also more than doubling to USD997.5 million.

----------

TP ICAP said it received acceptances for 98.3% of the 225.3 million shares offered in its 2-for-5 rights issue at 140.0p. Underwriters HSBC, BofA Securities, JP Morgan and Peel Hunt will find subscribers for the remaining shares or subscribe themselves. The rights issue will raise about GBP315 million.

----------

Signature Aviation said it has agreed to sell its engine repair & overhaul business to Scottsdale, Arizona-based Standard Aero, a provider of maintenance, repair and overhaul services, for USD230 million. Signature Aviation said it will receive about USD140 million in net proceeds after fees and price adjustments, which it will deploy in line with its target of keeping net debt at no more than 2.5 to 3.0 times underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation. "We are committed to delivering long-term sustainable value for shareholders and this sale focuses us on Signature Aviation our strong cash generative business," said CEO Mark Johnstone.

----------

Wednesday's Shareholder Meetings

Applegreen PLC - GM re Blackstone and founders takeover

EQTEC PLC - EGM re replacing Crest with Euroclear Bank

Finsbury Growth & Income Trust PLC - AGM

Great Western Mining Corp PLC - EGM re replacing Crest with Euroclear Bank

JPMorgan Asia Growth & Income PLC - AGM

KKV Secured Loan Fund Ltd - AGM

----------

By Tom Waite; thomaslwaite@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2021 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
31 May 2022 17:07

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Big oil lifts FTSE 100 as inflation hits Europe

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London ended mixed on Tuesday with oil majors helping lift the FTSE 100, while the European counterparts grappled with record inflation.

Read more
31 May 2022 13:05

Ofcom launches investigation into Royal Mail over failure to meet delivery targets

(Sharecast News) - Communications watchdog Ofcom has launched an investigation into postal service and courier company Royal Mail's failure to meet its delivery targets over the last twelve months.

Read more
29 May 2022 18:07

Sunday newspaper round-up: Ted Baker, Shanghai, Just Eat Takeaway

(Sharecast News) - Ted Baker's suitor from the other side of the Pond could step away from its bid for the fashion group. Authentic Brands had been negotiating an acquisition for £1.50 a share. Jut last week Ted Baker had said it was in talks with a 'preferred counter-party'. But now the US group is said to be studying deals elsewhere and the talks will in any case likely take several weeks. Other UK deals were a possibility although the US market remained its main focus. - Financial Mail on Sunday

Read more
27 May 2022 17:03

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks rise as key US inflation measure moderates

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London ended higher on Friday after data showed a key measure of US inflation eased, fuelling hopes that price increases could be slowing.

Read more
27 May 2022 10:06

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: JPMorgan cuts Just Eat Takeaway and Deliveroo

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Friday morning and Thursday:

Read more
27 May 2022 08:50

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE underperforms as markets add to post-Fed rise

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 fell in early dealings but is on track to post a weekly gain, while other stock markets were largely on the up on Friday in a sign investors are "comfortable" with central bank efforts to slow inflation.

Read more
27 May 2022 08:16

LONDON BRIEFING: Pound bounce holds back FTSE 100 ahead of US data

(Alliance News) - London shares were lagging other markets in Europe and Asia on Friday, after a strong rally on Wall Street overnight. The pound moved above USD1.26, holding back the FTSE 100 index and its many dollar earners.

Read more
25 May 2022 10:18

Centrica and Johnson Matthey indicated to join FTSE 100, Asos in 250

(Alliance News) - British Gas-owner Centrica PLC and chemical firm Johnson Matthey PLC are set to return to the FTSE 100 index next month, replacing television broadcaster ITV PLC and postal operator Royal Mail PLC, according to indicative changes released by FTSE Russell on Tuesday.

Read more
25 May 2022 08:28

LONDON BRIEFING: M&S warns on cost hit to profit but is well placed

(Alliance News) - Marks & Spencer on Wednesday reported a swing to profit for the year ended April 2, but the clothing, homewares and food retailer cautioned on profit in the year ahead, amid the war in Ukraine and investment plans.

Read more
24 May 2022 17:06

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks down as windfall tax woe hits energy firms

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London ended lower on Tuesday following weak PMI data, while fears over a potential windfall tax hurt energy companies.

Read more
24 May 2022 09:26

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Peel cuts Royal Mail; SocGen lifts Kingfisher

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning and Monday:

Read more
24 May 2022 08:24

LONDON BRIEFING: Barclays launches delayed GBP1 billion share buyback

(Alliance News) - Barclays said it will kick off a GBP1.00 billion share buyback programme on Tuesday. The programme, initially announced in February, had been delayed in March after the bank admitted it sold more financial products to investors than it was allowed to.

Read more
23 May 2022 09:52

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Morgan Stanley cuts WPP to 'underweight'

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Monday morning and Friday:

Read more
20 May 2022 12:13

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: China rate cut brightens end-of-week trading

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 in London was on course to post a weekly gain as the end of a rocky week saw sentiment perk up on news of an interest rate cut in China, contrasting with hawkish rhetoric - and rate hikes - from central banks in the US and Europe over recent months.

Read more
20 May 2022 09:43

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Deutsche Bank cuts Marshalls to 'hold'

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Friday morning and Thursday:

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.